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BANGKOK, Thailand -- Former Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra, whose
	government was toppled by a military coup in May, faces a possible 10
	years in prison after the Supreme Court on Thursday (March 19) ordered
	her trial for alleged negligence when she administered rice subsidies.
	
	"I am innocent," Ms. Yingluck said on her Facebook page, hours after
	the court's announcement.
	
	The crop subsidies "enhanced the living standards of the rice
	farmers," she said.
	
	"The Supreme Court's Criminal Division for Holders of Political
	Positions has authority to consider the case," the court ruled on
	Thursday (March 19).
	
	The Attorney General's office had charged her with "dereliction of
	duty" for not correcting alleged problems within her government
	subsidy program.
	
	Ms. Yingluck's trial, scheduled to start on May 19, is expected to
	increase divisions in this troubled and repressed Southeast Asian
	country.
	
	She remains popular despite the coup-installed junta's use of martial
	law, military courts for civilian dissidents, "attitude adjustment"
	re-education at army camps, and other punishments to silence demands
	for a return to democracy.
	
	Prosecutors allege Ms. Yingluck's negligence cost the country billions
	of dollars in price supports and other fees.
	
	Her supporters said the subsidies cost the government money because
	the program was planned as welfare for needy rice farmers.
	
	Much of the rice which the government purchased -- at up to twice the
	international market's prices -- is currently piled in warehouses
	where its quality is deteriorating due to humidity, mold and insects.
	
	Subsidized rice that the government bought and was able to sell or
	trade, did not make a profit.
	
	Ms. Yingluck's opponents said the subsidies suffered from corruption,
	theft, mismanagement and deception because she ignored warnings about
	such problems.
	
	But no one has ever been convicted of any major crimes, including
	corruption, linked to the subsidies.
	
	Nevertheless, allegations of corruption within the subsidy program,
	and her negligence, have played a big part in the opposition's
	hammering propaganda against Ms. Yingluck during the past year.
	
	The National Anti-Corruption Commission suggested a few months ago
	that Ms. Yingluck be forced to pay more than $15 billion for the
	subsidies' estimated cost because of her alleged negligence.
	
	Ms. Yingluck and her coalition won a July 2011 election, but a
	Constitutional Court ruled on May 7, 2014 that she, as prime minister,
	illegally demoted and promoted officials.
	
	When she had to step down because of that court's decision, she handed
	the prime ministry to a political ally, who ran her caretaker
	government and tried to arrange fresh elections.
	
	Two weeks later, Ms. Yingluck's crippled government was ousted by the
	U.S.-trained military on May 22.
	
	More recently, a coup-appointed National Legislative Assembly
	retroactively impeached Ms. Yingluck in January, banishing her from
	political power for five years.
	
	Her problems echo the financial trials and military attack which
	damaged her older brother, Thaksin Shinawatra, who was prime minister
	from 2001 until 2006 when the military seized power in a previous
	putsch.
	
	Mr. Thaksin is now an international fugitive dodging a two-year prison
	sentence for corruption.
	
	From self-exile, his manipulative influence and popularity enabled him
	to thrust his sister into the prime ministry despite Ms. Yingluck's
	lack of political experience.
	
	His enemies meanwhile hope to one day investigate Mr. Thaksin's "war
	on drugs," which resulted in more than 2,500 unexplained extrajudicial
	killings during his administration.
	
	They also hope the May 2014 coup and latest court cases will
	eventually destroy the Shinawatra family's authoritarian dynastic
	politics which have dominated Thailand during most of the 21st
	century.
	
	The Shinawatras boosted several relatives into important police,
	military and political posts, but the coup's regime has steadily
	eroded the family's sway.
	
	Much of Thailand's often violent political polarization comes from a
	cascade of power grabs during the past decade by the royalist military
	and its wealthy and middle-class supporters in Bangkok and the south.
	
	They oppose the increasingly strong competition from newly rich
	business leaders and allied politicians, such as the Shinawatras, who
	enjoy a majority of votes by the rural and urban poor in the north and
	northeast.
	
	U.S. State Department Assistant Secretary of State for East Asian and
	Pacific Affairs, Daniel Russel, warned the coup leaders in January
	about the criminal charges against Ms. Yingluck.
	
	"Although this is being pretty blunt, when an elected leader is
	removed from office, is deposed, then impeached by the authorities --
	the same authorities that conducted the coup -- and then when a
	political leader is targeted with criminal charges at a time when the
	basic democratic processes and institutions in the country are
	interrupted, the international community is going to be left with the
	impression that these steps could in fact be politically driven," Mr.
	Russel said in a speech in Bangkok at Chulalongkorn University.
	
	***
	
	Richard S. Ehrlich is a Bangkok-based journalist from San Francisco,
	California, reporting news from Asia since 1978.